Selling Used MP3s Found Legal In America
bs0d3 writes "After some litigation; ReDigi, a site where people can sell used MP3s has been found legal in America. One of the key decisions the judge had to make was whether MP3's were material objects or not. 'Material objects' are not subject to the distribution right stipulated in "17 USC 106(3)" which protects the sale of intellectual property copies. If MP3's are material objects than the resale of them is guaranteed legal under the first sale' exception in 17 USC 109. Capitol Records tried to argue that they were material objects under one law and not under the other. Today the judge has sided with the first-sale doctrine, which means he is seeing these as material objects."
Then why can't I also give them away? As in, transfer them, to friends, on P2P networks.
If a company can sell them, I don't see why I couldnt sell those I own too.
than /= then
"If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in 5 years there'd be a shortage of sand". -Milton F.
All your base belongs to the highest bidder.
I agree with him but I can also see why people would be against it. What's stopping me from selling numerous copies of my MP3s and retaining my original copies?
This decision is going to be challenged, directly or via changing of law, because it's a huge loss for the RIAA. I suspect it will be an important legal precedent, if it is not overturned.
"I will trust Google to 'do no evil' until the founders no longer run it." Hello Alphabet.
After some litigation; ReDigi, a site where people can sell used MP3's has been found legal in America.
Punctuation it: can go, pretty; much? Anywhere,
Obliteracy: Words with explosions
What is the mass of an MP3?
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
I think I have to side with the record companies on this one. When you sell a second hand album you are giving away a unique physical item. Selling a digital item provides no guarantee that you have "given" the original item, or that you don't have a million copies of it, or that you had an original item in the first place.
I'm sorry, but the only way to make this viable is to use DRM, and we all have pretty strong opinions on that.
The judge simply denied a motion for a preliminary injunction against the defendant which means the case will go to trial.
Actual source of information: http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2012/02/judge-denies-record-labels-request-to-shutter-used-mp3-store.ars
In short selling of used mp3's hasn't been answered yet (the summary is wrong).
Three cheers! Score one for the right of first sale!
GCS/MU/P d- s:- a-- C++++$ UL++ P+ L++ E+ W++ N o K- w--- O M+ V- PS+++ PE Y+ PGP t+ 5- X R++ tv+ b++ DI++ D++ G+ e++ h-
The title of this article is wrong. Everything I read shows no decision has been made yet. The Judge ruled that there is no need for a prelimenary injunction.
What is the mass of an MP3?
An African or European MP3?
I wonder if this would set a precedent for those who wanted to sell games they owned on digital distribution services like Steam?
Take what ye can. Give nothing back!
This is important, the precedent this creates will be important in the future of digital media. The implications could be ground-breaking. If it is a material object, it becomes subject to the laws which govern the purchase and use of a chair, or hammer. (as far as I can understand). I really wonder what effect it will have in the long run. If it will change things, or be forgotten.
~theCzar
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Just a few hours ago Slashdot reported that a judge had refused an injunction against ReDigi, and now they are supposed to have won their case? I'd say there are two possibilities: One, that we have a judge who can run at speeds exceeding the speed of light, because that's the only way a case could have finished so quick. Or second, that the submitter is a clueless twat you didn't understand a word of what he is actually submitting. Since there is no link to any real information, I assume the latter.
This story is bogus. It looks like yahoo news misquoted a arstechnica acticle. Then some blog sourced the yahoo new article. There was no ruling on First Sale. The ruling only states there is no need for an injunction. The judge is going to rule on First Sale in a few weeks.
Score is still 0 to 0. This article is bogus.
No, selling used mp3s has not been found legal. If you trace the link's back to the original source you get this article at Ars:
**Judge denies record label's request to shutter "used" MP3 store**
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2012/02/judge-denies-record-labels-request-to-shutter-used-mp3-store.ars
The judge still thinks ReDigi's arguments are likely to fail and that Capitol Records will prevail. The only thing that is significant is that ReDigi's case isn't over yet at the motion stage.
The activepolitic link sources yahoo news. yahoo news sources arstechnica. The arstechnica does not state a decision was made. It state the judge refused the injuction. Yahoo news screwed up and the activepolitic reposted it.
So if an MP3 is a material object and can thus be resold, what does this say about copying it?
In The New Yankee Workshop, host Norm Abram buys a piece of furniture and then brings it back to his shop. He then makes a very near exact replica of it and often donates or sells the replica. We have just concluded that an MP3 is a similar material object. What does this say about piracy? Is Norm a furniture pirate?
What does this say about software license agreements? Ignoring software patents, is it still illegal for me to reverse compile a piece of software to see how it works and then implement a piece of it in another project? Or is it not so material?
Use my userscript to add story images to Slashdot. There's no going back.
Why did the RIAA need them to be material objects under one law and not the other? What are the consequences if they are not considered 'material objects' under either law?
Need a Python, C++, Unix, Linux develop
Mind you, this has to get past the same Supreme Court that said Costco was Violating Rolex's trademark by importing watches from other (cheaper) markets for sale in the US. Right of First Sale is not their forte.
I'm sending you a new picture of a spider with eight legs. Please return my picture with seven legs.
Yeah, and informed account of that decision by the actual lawyer for ReDigi was
posted on slashdot just this morning.
There has been no definitive ruling by the courts in this litigation. The judge only denied Capitol Records request for a preliminary injunction against ReDigi to force them to cease operations while the litigation proceeds. That, most likely would have forced ReDigi out of business, which may well have been what the judge was thinking about. We won't have any real answers about this until after a trial and, presumably, the inevitable appeals.
More Info here and here
No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
The linked story is from some fly-by-night news site that cites a Yahoo! news posting that totally misinterprets an ArsTechnica posting that actually analyzes the actual decision (which is hosted on Wired.) Somehow in this online news game of telephone, it went from the actual story, posted accurately earlier in the day by NewYorkCountryLawyer, that the judge denied the plaintiff's motion for an injunction to the sensationalist story that the judge had ruled in favor of the defendant and ruled that their business is legal. Denying the injunction means that ReDigi gets to keep doing business during the trial. That's it, nothing more. They could still lose at trial. The trial hasn't even started, let alone been decided in a way that would mean that reselling mp3s is legal.
In short, this is a misinformed dupe of the story posted by NewYorkCountryLawyer earlier in the day. Read and comment on that one because this is sensationalist garbage. Nothing to see here. Move along.
"Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
I am loving the irony. For decades these jerks made us buy vinyl, then 8-tracks, then cassettes, then DAT, then CDs (maybe even fancy gold ones) of the same songs each time a new format became available --and if the player ate my tape, I had to shell out another $8.50. They told us we were purchasing physical objects. Now they claim music is intellectual property and you can't resell it?
How long before music comes with a EULA?
Ask me about my sig!
As many of you have pointed out, the linked article -- and hence the Slashdot summary -- are inaccurate. The judge denied the record company's motion for a preliminary injunction... no more, no less. Here is the court's decision, along with "commentary and discussion" from other news media, including the accurate Slashdot post on this case.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
In terms of the licensing between the media companies and their sellers (i.e. iTunes), it's no longer a distributor model, but a publisher model, since iTunes itself makes and sells you a copy of a song. Unless their servers contain thousands of copies of the same song and they delete one every time they sell one, they are now publishers in the sense that they make the copies, rather than distributors (like record stores) who just sell the copies shipped to them.
So, does this even matter in the long run?
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....they were all scratched.
Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
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So the same logic should apply to video games correct? I should be able to resell a copy I purchased off Steam?
Some lame, lazy ass slashdot editor needs to be fired over this article. Something that would be of interest to a majority of the /. readership and he can't be bothered to check a link or verify the story? It's a wonder anyone subscribes any more.
'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
...then isn't copying them (downloading/distribution) counterfeiting? Could serial copyright infringers find themselves at the blunt end of a racketeering charge?
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
"...which protects the sale of intellectual property copies..."
The law does not recognize "intellectual property" or copies thereof. The section linked specifically calls out copyrighted works as well as "literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and motion pictures and other audiovisual works". But no, the popular catch phrase "intellectual property" is not to be found. Just sayin (like RMS) there is no IP, only copyright, trademark, and patent law. Let us not try to broaden any one category by deliberately confusing them all, or elevate them to some higher "intellectual" level.
It's not a loss for the RIAA in any way.
Now they are considered material objects it will be easier to sue people for downloading/uploading them.
Don't you mean RAID 0 in this case (ie: striping; performance boost at the cost of increased probability of data loss assuming drive failure rate P is independent from drive to drive)?
Or, are you referring to a faulty RAID 1 (mirroring) configuration where two disks are cloned (for the most part, say, 99.999%), but there is somehow a file on one of the two disks that is not on the other? That must be a pretty shoddy RAID controller if that is the case. I've only ever seen such an outcome with the cheap Dell NAS units that did RAID 0, 1, 1+0, 5, and X-RAID. They don't do real hardware RAID, just Linux LVM partitioning to accomplish software RAID. When I found this out, I was kind of choked considering how expensive they were, but I figured so long as I have redundant data, who cares about performance for a device that isn't used much.
Then it loses information on the LVM partition setup and I have to manually recover over the course of two days with a Slackware Linux machine built for tech tasks. What a nightmare. Although this is not the same error you encountered, I can sympathize with someone who has had to deal with cut-rate RAID controllers.
So the whole transfer thing is kind of like being beamed somewhere in star trek...
are you really being transferred, or just disintegrated and rebuilt someplace else? does the second James Brown mp3 have the same soul?
IANAL, but I have the feeling that this will be important to the legal system.
I gather that users are typically only paying for licenses to use mp3s or software (or even hardware at times).
I don't really know how resale of games is handled currently, but I think it's discouraged by game publishers. If these were all material commodities, then resale of digitally-bought games might open too. Would jailbreaking still be of questionable legality?
I'm afraid that mp3s being material commodities would increase the penalties for piracy, but at the same time, it would make these sorts of things more-easily available at lower prices.
Instead of ebaying to find that game for $5+shipping, winning the auction, and waiting for it to ship, maybe i'd be able to download it overnight for $3. I have tons of old (and not-so-old) games and music that I never play and would gladly part with but that the inconvenience of selling them is greater than the collector's pride in having a folder full of old CDs.
Hollywood and content industry in general to learn hard facts about price elasticity of demand.
Or the steam sales, where offering a product at a fair price to market perception caused UNBELIEVABLE number of purchases. Valve's minds are literally blown by how much more games sell when you slash the price in half. I mean, a sale traditionally increases how much people buy, but we're talking over a hundred-fold more. Thats why you've seen sale after sale after sale on Steam; by charging LESS, they actually make MORE.
Anyone ever studied even a bit of market economy past 100 years or so could have told anyone asking. that behaviour is quite expected this type of product as it's fairly elastic as it can be categorized as luxury and non necessary goods for everyday live.
It's quite acceptable that every pedestrian does not realize that, but I'm amazed that content companies doesn't seem to know jack-sh*t about it !
Are just like "used" HTML pages. They are just files, copies or "original" files.
They are mine.
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
If an MP3 is a material object, then what would be an example of an immaterial object?
the judge only refused an injunction, not actually made any kind of ruling.
"Legal in America" Right. "America" extends from Quttinirpaaq (let's say) to Cabo de Hornos (let's say). Which bit of this "America" is affected by this ruling? Fucken Yanks.
Doh.
Don't these people know that you can make copies of files/mp3's.
Don't tell them yet, we can make a killing here.
Even if this is proven legal under the law, it won't be long till the RIAA brib...uh...lobbies congress to pass a law for them to make it illegal.
Mp3's and other digital media actually do exist in the form of 0's and 1's that are present in some sort of electrical charge or optical divot. rabbits are easy to duplicate and you can sell those, so the ease of duplication does not preclude something which exists from being sellable.
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